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The Japanese language has three different alphabets: hiragana, katakana and kanji. Hiragana and katakana represent syllables and have a fixed number of characters (46 each, 92 in total). Kanji characters are much more complex; in theory there are more than 50,000 kanji characters. The good news is that “officially” only 1,945 of them can be used. These 1,945 kanji form a list known as jōyō kanji “常用漢字”, that supposedly every Japanese person has to known to be able to read without problems. These are the 1,945 kanji characters of the jōyō kanji list in a 10 minute video:

The “bad” news this week for Japanese learners is that after 29 years without changes the government has decided to add 196 new kanjis to the list. They have also removed 5 kanjis from the list, so the list from now on will have 2,136 official kanji characters. So, does this mean that now it is more difficult to learn Japanese? I don’t think so; it’s basically the same because the characters that have been added were being used in practice by almost everybody even if they were not on the list. I suppose that that is the reason they have decided to expand the list, the new kanji are really well-known and it is absurd not to consider them “official”.

This is the complete list of all the 196 characters added and the 5 characters removed. There are also some extra notes about new readings and extra 熟語 (jukugo).

Here I select some of the kanji that caught my attention because I thought they were already official but it turns out they weren’t. If you have studied Japanese for three or four years it’s almost sure you already know almost all of them; the ass character was no official!!: